I agree with you totally but I would add that the numbers of registered players and whether there is a re-buy or an add on can change the dynamic of the game quite a bit as well. A lot more chances being taken.Generally yes, but it all boils down to what players are willing to risk, In freerolls they are risking nothing so they really don't care whether they win or lose, it's just a game to them, and you do get the idiot all-in pushes with any two cards because they don't care.
When you buy into a game, then it becomes more serious because you are basically putting your own money up front, but the buy-ins could still be peanuts compared to what they have in their Bankroll.
Bill Perkins and Guy Laliiberte are millionaires in their own right and play High Stakes Poker all the time, not because they need the money, but they enjoy playing against the best players in the World. So the buy-ins become proportional to what they can afford to lose. I have seen Bill Perkins pay the buy-in for other people, not wanting the money back or a piece of their action, just being nice to someone who would not normally play at those type of levels. The money becomes immaterial to them because they don't need it and I have seen some crazy bluffs from them both.
Poker is a fun game, and I only ever play with money I am not afraid to lose, whether that's £5, £25, or £100 , if I cannot afford to burn it, I simply don't play. Playing with money that you cannot afford to lose, is playing with "Scared Money" and very stupid.
That is definitely the core of the issue. Many people hate bad beats, and if the opponent played poorly, then ego comes into play, and many people feel, they "deserved" to win, because they played better than the lucky opponent.I wonder if the issue some players have isn't if microstakes mtts are easier to beat, but that they can't handle the higher variance in microstakes.
their biggest opponent is themselves.That is definitely the core of the issue. Many people hate bad beats, and if the opponent played poorly, then ego comes into play, and many people feel, they "deserved" to win, because they played better than the lucky opponent.
82 different suits? club, spade, heart, diamond... what are the other 78 suits?I've played several tournaments above the micro limits, but I've had enough experience to agree with you. At micro limits, studying the theory of some strategies becomes completely unimportant when a person from the previous one decides to introduce 82 different suits and he will get 82 and there are a lot of such situations at micro-limits, I hardly saw it at stake older
very trueFace it folx, the days of fish everywhere are over, imo. The better players go where the fish are at and right now most of them are in the micro to low limits. Sure, you'll find that there are easy games at higher stakes but it's the same for all stakes. Ever play in one of these CC freerolls? There not exactly paying out life-changing $ around here but the players are going to play their asses off to get the 100, 25, or whatever 1st place is. Trust me, it's all about the experience/variance of the players in the trny w/you (yours included) that matters whether you cash, not the stakes. That's just my opinion but I think it's somewhat spot-on.
I don't have experience in expensive tournaments, so the only answer is, low buy-in is easierI think a lot of the posters are not thinking about whether it's easier to win money or not in higher entry fee tourneys. They do seem to agree that it's easier to lose at micros because the players have less to lose. budweiser 74777 sums it up - "it's not a pity to lose a penny". But that's not my original question. However there have been some very good posts on the subject.